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  • DeadlineStudy Details: 12 months (full time)

Masters Degree Description

The MA Fine Art: Drawing course reconsiders the practice of drawing. You’ll explore its capacity to change and evolve and experiment with different methods. These include 2D/3D practices, virtual methodologies and film. You’ll also consider the materiality of art and drawing practice.

During seminars and lectures, we examine the urgent social, cultural, environmental and political frameworks that underpin fine art drawing. This knowledge will help you to critically reflect and expand your own research and drawing practice.

We encourage you to consider drawing’s potential for interdisciplinarity and how it is often central to a wealth of communication practices. Drawing distinguishes itself as a democratic and sustainable practice as it can be both portable and affordable when compared to other disciplines. Drawing can be direct, immediate, original, and exploratory and this plays a key role in generating and evolving ideas sustainably and flexibly.

By the end of the course, you will have developed a portfolio of work demonstrating your individual research interests, visual range and storytelling skills to potential employers.

What to expect:

Entry Requirements

We look for:

  • Commitment and motivation for studying the subject at Masters level
  • Work that shows potential for further development
  • Demonstrate a holistic understanding of research
  • Ability to identify or speculate on the direction and development of practice and research
  • An awareness of contexts and frameworks for contemporary practice
  • Able to communicate clearly in order to present and discuss work and ideas with others
  • Able to demonstrate written skills

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Fees

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Student Destinations

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Module Details

Unit 1: Locating practice within specialism

In this unit, we’ll introduce you to the teaching, learning and research culture of Camberwell College of Arts. Through independent practical experimentation in the studio, workshops and beyond, you’ll test your ideas and challenge your approaches to making your artwork. You’ll will have the opportunity to explore a range of materials, methods and techniques to expand and deepen your technical and practical skills.

You'll identify your aims and intentions through research and critical reflection. This will be supported by an introduction to key practice-based research methodologies.

You’ll interrogate and debate key ideas and developments within Drawing and build upon your technical, practical and presentational skills. You’ll extend your network beyond your subject specialism through cross-pathway MA Fine Art lectures and presentations. Alongside these teaching and learning events, the Professional Toolkit programme will support the development of your professional skills and knowledge.

Throughout the unit, you’ll document the key developments in your studio practice and reflect critically on your specific research questions and contexts. This will form the core part of your Unit 1 assessment submission for which you will receive written and verbal feedback.

Unit 2: Testing beyond specialism

In this unit, you’ll build on the feedback you received at the end of Unit 1. This will help you to focus and deepen your research and further define your own unique set of creative processes through independent and peer-to-peer learning. Through seminars, reading groups and talks, you’ll continue to engage with current debates within art, culture and society. You’ll test the rigour of your work seminars, crits and exhibitions. We’ll encourage you to extend your research methods and to engage with research resources beyond the University.

You’ll explore different approaches to critical reflection and writing about your artwork and research through a series of workshops. You’ll continue to equip yourself with a broad range of professional skills and knowledge through talks and workshops to prepare you for a sustainable and rewarding professional life in the art world and wider creative industries.

In the second part of this unit, you’ll start working towards a coherent body of work for presentation in a major public exhibition, the MA Show, which takes place at the beginning of Unit 3.

At the end of the unit, you’ll submit a body of work and a research file in. This is an opportunity to critically reflect on the key developments in your practice and the ideas, debates and contexts that shape your work.

Unit 3: Making public

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